Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA rugby league player in the early 1980's battles against the changing game and the betrayal of those he has been loyal to. Alienated and desperate, he struggles to keep an identity he fears... Leer todoA rugby league player in the early 1980's battles against the changing game and the betrayal of those he has been loyal to. Alienated and desperate, he struggles to keep an identity he fears he'll be lost without.A rugby league player in the early 1980's battles against the changing game and the betrayal of those he has been loyal to. Alienated and desperate, he struggles to keep an identity he fears he'll be lost without.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 1 nominación en total
Kate Mulvany
- Kate
- (as Kate Mulvaney)
Katie Nazer-Hennings
- Rebecca
- (as Katie Nazar Hennings)
Damian de Montemas
- Max
- (as Damien De Montemas)
Opiniones destacadas
10gss-24
One of the best sport themed movies ever made, especially for the budget. In fact, probably better for the low budget as it means the focus is purely only the script and some good acting. Not fantastic acting, but most of the actors aren't really actors. hats off to Matt Nable for doing a great job in his first ever acting role, brining his own script to life with passion. There's only one sport scene in it, at the very beginning, and the rest of the film is a touching look at old school sportsmen as times changed and loyalty is being bought by big money investors. Relevant to fans of any sports, especially those over 30. Worth watching.
With great expectations I bought my ticket for this last Friday, and while it wasn't rugby league's answer to The Club in the manner I'd been hoping for, the rewards in quality of characterisation and the film's theme of corporate power eroding the bonds of community and family and the examination of what it means to be a man more than make up for it. A quality debut performance from Matt Nable ably supported by Raelee Hill as the wife holding Grub's family together lead the way, with good support from Nathaniel Dean as the heir apparent to the old lion's crown. Matt Johns rises to a level well beyond the Footy Show's ouevre, the pillow fitted unnecessarily under his shirt with the aim of giving him the beer-stained look of coaches of yore notwithstanding. There's a few vague references to ethereal concepts of "the game" that don't quite sit true and the cry for the loss of league's golden era doesn't blend fully with the other elements of the story; John Jarratt's corporate figure intent on bringing the old footballer's era to an end is an almost comedic caricature, but the scenes bringing Nable's Grub and his brother Billy, whose star is in the ascendant with the Winfield Cup and associated riches just around the corner, together in conflict acquit Nable's writing well. I couldn't go further without mentioning Kate Mulvaney's gems of support as Kate, doling out advice over the bar as the mother some of these lonely boys never had. As with so many sports movies the theme is loss, introspection and redemption, but its qualities are best appreciated from a human point of view with sport as a background and conduit for the story. A high quality debut effort, with a soundtrack of summery Aussie nostalgia and cameos from a selection of familiar players and coaches of yesteryear when smoking on the reserves bench and beers after training were part of the fabric of Australian sporting life certain to bring a smile.
This is a great little Australian film about how men really screw things up for themselves.
The scene - suburban Australia in the early 1980's, when Rugby league was moving from amateur clubs to the super-clubs we see now.
The characters - Grub has been playing for his rugby club for about 11 years. He's getting older and his marriage is getting stale. He has a fraught relationship with his brother, his wife, his coach - with just about everyone, in fact. He's unlikable, but very well acted by Matt Nable (a former rugby player himself, apparently).
The story starts with an on-field incident which may well end Grub's career. The film then follows the characters as they work through the issues arising from this (I can't say anymore without spoiling the film)
My rather bald summary doesn't do the film justice. This is a really powerful human drama which left me thinking hard for quite a while afterwards. It's tightly constructed and very well acted by the whole crew.
The sports theme is going to turn a lot of people off, but it's really only a backdrop to a very compelling story.
The scene - suburban Australia in the early 1980's, when Rugby league was moving from amateur clubs to the super-clubs we see now.
The characters - Grub has been playing for his rugby club for about 11 years. He's getting older and his marriage is getting stale. He has a fraught relationship with his brother, his wife, his coach - with just about everyone, in fact. He's unlikable, but very well acted by Matt Nable (a former rugby player himself, apparently).
The story starts with an on-field incident which may well end Grub's career. The film then follows the characters as they work through the issues arising from this (I can't say anymore without spoiling the film)
My rather bald summary doesn't do the film justice. This is a really powerful human drama which left me thinking hard for quite a while afterwards. It's tightly constructed and very well acted by the whole crew.
The sports theme is going to turn a lot of people off, but it's really only a backdrop to a very compelling story.
I saw this movie yesterday evening where it had its premiere as part of the Sydney Film Festival. It was with much anticipation and a great deal of interest that I went to see this film, as there have been few Australian films centered around Rugby League (as opposed to AFL or Australian Rules Football - The Club, Australian Rules, The Great McCarthy etc). I was not disappointed. 'The Final Winter' is set in the early 1980's and follows the story of Grub, a working class married father of two who has been a loyal player for the Newtown Jets for many years. Grub finds himself at a crossroad in his life when the the teams administration decides that they do not need him and are moving towards a corporate style of management particularly in regard to their players. The film follows his journey, with the help of family and friends, as he reassesses his priorities and how he has defined himself. While the film is essentially a drama there are plenty of comic moments with cameos by some well known Rugby greats. And while the performances are excellent all round particular mention must go to Matt Nable's moving performance as Grub; and Raelee Hill as his wife Emma, her performance is astonishing in a film predominated by men. However it must be said that all the female characters in the film are strongly drawn or written, which is refreshing and gives the film a complexity and depth that other films, that center around all male sport teams, have lacked. There is a great soundtrack of early 80's Aussie songs to help recreate the era and set the mood. In particular 'Short Note' by Matt Finnish. At the end of the screening the audience was informed in a Q & A that the film has been picked up by Paramount. I am not surprised. This is a film which should get a wide release and deserves success. Recommended.
I arrived in Sydney in the mid-1980's as a dyed-in-the-wool rugby union man - ex-player, avid follower. But when I saw Sydney rugby league, hard, uncompromising, skillful, I fell in love with it. It was the era dominated by Parramatta and Canterbury. I'd heard about Newtown - foundation club and so on - but like a defeated Prime Minister, the club was gone, and no-one had much interest in it any more.
This movie goes back a few years, to the early 80's, when Newtown was struggling to survive. The old-school league men were being replaced by businessmen. It was an approach that didn't save Newtown, and a decade or so later, when greed and big business combined to create the Super League wars, it drove people away from the game in, well, droves, including me. From someone who used to immerse himself in the game from Friday to Sunday nights, my interest declined to where it is today - about zero.
But nevertheless, I found this movie intensely interesting, arousing some desire to perform further research into the Newtown era. Matt Nable, the Charles Bronson look-alike whom I've never heard of before, and the driving force behind the movie, has done a terrific job of creating a (mostly) polished product. Matthew Johns and Kate Mulvaney were good in supporting roles, but the standout for me was Raelee Hill. I'd seen her in a few TV roles, but in this, she was perfect. The kids were good too.
I wouldn't class this alongside, say, Romulus My Father, but it was still a surprisingly good Aussie movie.
This movie goes back a few years, to the early 80's, when Newtown was struggling to survive. The old-school league men were being replaced by businessmen. It was an approach that didn't save Newtown, and a decade or so later, when greed and big business combined to create the Super League wars, it drove people away from the game in, well, droves, including me. From someone who used to immerse himself in the game from Friday to Sunday nights, my interest declined to where it is today - about zero.
But nevertheless, I found this movie intensely interesting, arousing some desire to perform further research into the Newtown era. Matt Nable, the Charles Bronson look-alike whom I've never heard of before, and the driving force behind the movie, has done a terrific job of creating a (mostly) polished product. Matthew Johns and Kate Mulvaney were good in supporting roles, but the standout for me was Raelee Hill. I'd seen her in a few TV roles, but in this, she was perfect. The kids were good too.
I wouldn't class this alongside, say, Romulus My Father, but it was still a surprisingly good Aussie movie.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaKate Mulvany's debut.
- ErroresWhen Grub is driving to work on Monday, in the background you can see a sign displaying a business phone number with eight digits. All phone numbers in the Sydney metropolitan area in the 1980s only had seven digits. (On 29 July 1996, a 9 was added to the beginning of all Sydney phone numbers.)
Selecciones populares
Inicia sesión para calificar y agrega a la lista de videos para obtener recomendaciones personalizadas
Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- AUD 1,600,000 (estimado)
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 225,834
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 36 minutos
- Color
Contribuir a esta página
Sugiere una edición o agrega el contenido que falta